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PAGES PROM THE SERMONS 
■:• oF a ■■■■ 

youNG Country Ministcr 



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PAGES PROM THE SERMONS 
3 '^ - •■•• of a ■■■■ 

youNG Country MINISTER 



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Copyright 1886, by 

Malan Humphrey Wright. 



^0 HI}} Hlotljer, 

My guardiaq, coqpaqioq, aqd frieqd iq childhood, youtF], 
and nqanl^ood, I affectioqately dedicate 
• • this little book. 

THE AUTHOR. 



FAITH. 



T 



HOUGH days and months and years I bear 
A cross of wood, 
Though bend with care, 

Though grief o'er all my life be spread; 

If faith be absent, I am dead. 

Faith only is the living stay 
Of living men along the way. 
The law my guide, I start and shrink ; 
But walk with faith along the brink : 
And sorrow ne'er can darker be 
Than faith shall light the way for me. 
She rides in i)eace above the wave ; 
She knows her God is strong to save. 



— 5 — 



CnLYflKY. 



W 



HAT sage research had never found; 
What nature never knew; 
What cries and tears could not avail, 
Is offered free to you. 



Man labors on from youth to age, 
Perplexed with various care; 

Though strain and toil be multii)lied, 
His sin shall yet be there. 

The troubled conscience seeks for peace; 

She tries full mauy a road: 
Yet, though her feet be tired and sore, 

She leadeth not to God. 

There is one Way and only one — 

All others go astray — 
Since thou dost know it, travel on; 

Begin in it to-day. 

It is " The way of holiness ;" 

O'er it go no unclean: 
Warfaring men and fools as well, 

They shall not err therein. 

'No 14ons there nor rav'uous beast ; 

They shall not there be found; 
But the redeemed shall walk therein ; 

Their peace and joy abound. 
— 6 — 



THE "MORNING STAR." 



H 



E SPAKE ! the mountains firmlj^ stood, 
The valleys and the crystal flood; 
The sun shone out with golden light ; 
The moon led forth the starry night. 

He spake! and man alone appeared, 
And viewed the scene his Lord had reared 
In lovely guise and modest mien, 
The partner of his joys is seen. 

Alas, that joy should be so brief! 
Departing as the falling leaf! 
Some bitter spell, foul sin hath found ; 
And hope is fallen to the ground. 

But, sure, there doth a star arise! 

It beams in AheVs sacrifice ! 

This star of hope shall never set; 

It glows, and beams, and brightens, yet. 

Where is its orbit ? Whence doth shine 
This beaming star, so much Divine? 
From Calvary's cross it lights afar, 
Forward and backward — glorious star ! 

Its gleaming light shall never set, 
A light for weary pilgrims, yet; 
And children's children, from afar, 
Shall hail with joy the "Morning Star." 

— 7 — 



A PRAISE LYRIC. 



B 



RING hither all your garlands now, 

And wreath them for Immanuel's brow ; 
The honors richest, brightest, best, 
Forever on His head shall rest. 

Stoop down and touch the trembling lyre 
Kindle each voice with passion's hre: — 
^o strains so sweet shall ever be 
As the saved render, Lord, to thee. 



w 



HY is it that they tarry, 

And press not to the van — 
Behind, the cross of Calv'ry; 
Before, the dying manf 



WISDOM. 



T 



HERE is a wisdom sure and true; 
A wisdom old yet ever new: 
]S^o price can gain it ; it is free : — 
Thy God would grant it, man, to thee. 

Before it dwindles human lore; 
It is since all and was before — 
Listen, O man ! it calls to thee : 
Heed thou its voice — 'twill make thee free. 

— 8 — 



LUKE X: 2. 



H 



ARVESTS on harvests plenteous 

Eeapers and laborers few 5 

Eooni waiting — fields of whiteness- 

Tbe call is made to you. 



Say not you are not able 
To gather in a sheaf — 

The grain falls out and wasteth ; 
The harvest time is brief. 

Work while the day time lasteth ; 

The night fast draweth nigh : 
The faithful laborer laboreth ; 

The fruit, laid up on high. 

And when the fields of whiteness 
Stretch out before our view ; 

While, throughout all their borders, 
The laborers are few; 

The old command before us, 

Calls to the place of prayer ; 

Tliat He Who loves the harvest, 
May send the laborers there. 



Oj^LY TRUST HIM. 



►HEY who trust Him shall rejoice; 
He's the best, the only choice: 
Choose Him, He will bring yon home- 
Choose Him while there yet is room. 

In the grave no choice is made, 
Passed the grain under the blade: 
Be it tare or be it wheat, 
Each lies for its own place meet. 

Never will the reaper there 
Change to wheat the gathered tare: 
Soul of sin, and soul of grace — 
Each shall go to its own place. 

Enter then, there yet is room, 
E'er the darkness of the tomb ; 
Enter while the light of day 
Calls you from your sins away. 



10 



HEAYEJM. 



r\ HEAVEN indeed thou dearest place ! 
^ What storms of earth so fierce, 

Or dark, or swift, or terrible, 
The hope of thee to pierce? 

Rejoicing in the hope of thee, 
. And looking for thy light, 

How can we see the clouds that rise 
-To hide thy glory bright? 

Earth's hopes grow dim and disappear; 
Earth's sweetest fruits may cloy: 

But hope of Heaven's futurity, 
Has bliss without alloy. 

Keal for unreality ; 

The substance for the shade; 

The fruit after the very storm 
That watered well the blade. 



11 



I.NVIT/ITION. 



COME while mercy sheds its ray, 
Bright with hope, ou life's short day- 
Day that soon must pass away, 
Leaving naught but crumbling clay. 

Then the harvest may be past ; 
Then the door of hope be fast. 
Many then shall stand aghast 
In that awful day, the last. 

Come while life is fair and bright; 
Choose the path of truth and right; 
Way that runs and ends in light; 
Leads to beatific sight. 

Night there is without, and gloom ; 
Yet within the kingdom room — 
Heaven and rest and endless home: 
Hither, wanderer! enter, come. 



12 



■ Truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ. 
—1 John, 1 / 3, 



ETERNAL fellowship of love ; 
Beguu on earth, complete above : 
Nor earth, nor air, nor rolling sea. 
Can find the soul such company. 



What else can satisfy its life? 
Who else can nerve it for the strife? 
Or what can feed the hungry heart, 
If it from Christ, its Bread, depart? 

Yet where doth beam this Heavenly Sun? 
Upon the lowly contrite one: 
And he who trembleth at the word 
Of Zion's King, in reverence heard, 

Shall find his soul glad company, 
The eternal, sacred, holy Three: 
For God in glory shall abide 
Within the hearts that thus provide. 



fi. PRAYER. 







JESUS, my Saviour, 

In th' depth of thy grace 
Oh! show me thy favor — 
Oh ! show me thy face. 

Thy mercy is gracious; 

Thy name, it is love — 
Oh ! grant me thy pardon, 

And help from above. 

I loug time have wander'd 

In darkness and sin — 
Oh! enter my heart's door, 

And cleanse me within. 

Though I were the foulest, 

Thy blood can make clean : 

Thy death was for sinners; 
On thee will I lean. 

Eejoice, O my soul, thou; 

His mercy is sure: 
Though diseased, thou shalt find there 

An infinite cure. 

His smile, it is health, then; 

His love, it is peace; 
From all of sin's tossings, 
A happy release. 

— Amen. 
— 14 — 



WILL you not choose His path to-night? 
His service is the way of light : 
His kingdom is the Heavenly place, 
The home of all the heirs of grace. 

So darksome is earth's brightest day ! 
So long and rough tlie shortest way! 
So filled with gloom its gathering night, 
When here we only walk by sight! 

Still shines on earth the Morning Star- 
Effulgence streaming from afar — 
It guideth to the home of rest, 
The mansions of the ever-blest. 

Follow its light— make it thy guide— 
You need no other ray, beside — 
'Twill lead thee to the perfect dayj 
'Twill cast a halo o'er the way. 



— 15- 



IKE God would ye be! 
i Then value the days 
When the lot of the dowucast 

Ye may lighten with praise; 
When lap of the hungry 

Ye may fill full with wheat ; 
And the pale, starveling children 

May strengthen with meat. 

Search out the widow: 

Bring hope to her breast; 

And nourish the fatherless 
Out of your best. 

Try, break off the strong chains 
From the captives of sin ; 

And shelter the homeless 
Your own home within. 

Like God would ye be ? 

Then up and be strong ; 
Improve the bright talents 

That to thee belong: 
Bring into the store-house 

Of glad heavenly love, 
Such rich, golden treasures 

As cause joy above. 



— 16 — 



CHARITY. 



CHARITY is a wonderful thing. 
Such is the feathering over her wing, 
Mantle she makes so great as shall hide 
Like to the co\'erings of the salt tide. 

Shame finds a garment wonderful fair; 
Poverty hides there and loses her care; 
Sin comes with weeping under that wing; — 
Charity is a most beautiful thing. 

Look thee within — has thy soul any wing? 
Or chief in its building is there a sting! 
Dark is the storm that earth overcasts; 
Shelter thee some from the withering blasts. 

Is it a foe? Yet bid him come in — 
Foemen are sufferers, also, from sin : 
Lovest thou God? Then like Him must be; 
Thou wast God's enemy — Christ died for thee. 

Over the depth of our sin and our shame, 
Love is the messenger sent to reclaim ; 
Hush then the voice of thy clamoring spite — 
Lovest thou only the one who does right? 



— 17 — 



*' Weep o'er the erring one," lift him witli prayer 
Into the realm of the Father's own care ; 
Seek to reclaim him, but never with spite — 
Thou art the one who not always dost right. 

Love is a virtue so deep and so high 
It must descend to us out of the sky ; 
Earth cannot nurture it — earth is too dry — 
This plan J must be watered out of the sky. 



H 



ABK to the voice of love Divine; 
Drive forth His enemy and thine; 
Purge all thj^ soul from thoughts unkind ; 
And fill thee with a Heavenly mind. 

Let all thy actions drop with love; 
Choose for thy pattern God above; 
Be Christ like in humility ; 
Be man-like in docility. 



18 — 



" Hitl^Erto HatI] th& Lord Helped Us.' 



T 



HIS ''hitherto" demands our praise 
Throughout the remnant of our days; 
Demands the high and swelling song 
To roll through all our lives along: 
Demands a life so pure and good, 
'Twill be for other lives as food. 

This hitherto — 'tis great and high ; 

Its mercies reach unto the sky : 

And time's too short to sing its praise ;- 

Heaven's ages will the anthem raise. 

Wake, then, the song; its voice sliall be 
An echoing voice of joy to thee. 
Begin that praise so deep and high 
Thou'lt finish it beyond the sky. 
There with angelic hosts above, 
Join thou to praise redeeming love. 



— 19 — 



K 



ISE, then, ye hosts against our Lord ; 

Put on your eager boast: 
We meet you not with trumpet loud, 

Nor million-throated host. 

We call not earth and air to fight, 

Nor shiv'ring hail to fall : 
The church while battling for the right, 

Eelies more on the call — 

Lord send thy Spirit from above, 

" In plenitude of grace;" 
Convert thine enemies in love, 

And save th' apostate race. 



S0WIJ4G. 



ow with a lavish hand : 

Sow early and with toil: 
Sow when the evening comes apace ; — 

No seeds in faith sown spoil. 

They shall be treasure cast 

Like bread the waters o'er ; 

They shall spring up, fruit of the past. 
And springing, bless thee more. 

— 20 — 



1 Kings, XIX. 

GOD rules in the desert 
Where the voice of man is still, 
He rules in the crowded' city ; 

But here no rebel -will 
Opposes its dark designs 

To the will of Him who made it; 
But as, in our northern pines 

Ere the foot of man invaded, 
There was quiet, and peace, and rest ; 

So the lonely peaks of Sinai 
Obeyed their King's behest. 

Alone with God, Elijah, — 

It is well indeed for thee; 

But would it have been, poor sinner, 
For thy soul and for me? 

Discouraged art thou, and weary? 

The angel of hope may come; 
And, touching thee with his finger, 

Feed thee and spur thee on. 

But, remember! God's good angels 
Come not to rebellious souls; 

And would'st thou see the water. 

And the cake baked on the coals? 



— 21 



Enlist thee under the banner 

Of Him who has died to save ; 

Then the angels shall minister to thee, 
Or fellowship over the grave. 

Worn out with thy earthly endeavor, 

There'll be bread for thee from above, 

And the gentle touch of the angel. 
And the ministry of love. 

Oh ! yes, there is friendship sweeter. 

And fellowship richer far; 
For God will be thy Companion, 

And thy joy earth cannot mar. 



ET us sanctify through the word of God and prayer 
every creature of God's hand which He bestows 
upon us. So shall our days be passed in the fear 
and love of God. 

Not lightly with unfeeling mirth 
Let us enjoy the gifts of earth; 
Not thoughtless, as if all below 
Were here to stay nor we to go : 

But reverent, thankful, full of love 
Toward God who reigns below, above; 
With hearts of tenderness and zeal 
To seek each one the others weal. 



22 



EiYE me Jesus in my soul — the effects of His salva- 
tion received through faith — and I despise all of 
earth's philosophies, traditions, cultures. I know 
that they are but cold, shallow, though pretentious 
things. They may affect the external. They cannot 
give life. They cannot give pardon of sin — never 
— never — never. They cannot form the heart in 
Godlike likeness — never, never. They cannot re- 
store God to His righful place in the soul and its 
affections — never, never. They cannot move the 
soul to love for its fellow men — never. 

They are shadowy forms that seem to be; 
But their seeming can never change the me 
That lies beneath the outward sight, 
The I that should and must do right. 

There are things i\i2it iwomise that they are good. 
There are dainties that claim to be living food ; 
But when tried of the soul they are evil found — 
The soul that eats them returns to the ground. 

The promise of life they do not fulfill. 
Oh ! follow them, starving man, if you will : 
But know that, when time shall cease to be, 
Dry dust and ashes they'll be to thee, 

Hateful things with a promise that lies; 
The soul that feeds upon them dies. 



23 



T 



''I Am The Bread of Life," John vi: 48. 

HE Bread I covet most 

Is uot the moulding loaf; 
The earthy wheat though fair and bright, 

Is not for me enough. 



There is a Heaven -giv'n loaf, 

A life-giving supply ; 
Sinners may eat, be satisfied; 

May feed, and never die 

Its cost a painful cross, 

The agony of Heaven ; 
Such cost's above our highest price ;— 

It must be freely giv'n. 

Freely ? Yes, 'tis the word 
Jehovah writes in blood ; 

Come, take, and thou shalt surely live, 
Upon the word of God. 

Reject not such a love; 

Scorn not compassion high : — 
Rejecting, there's a vast remove; 

He that rejects must die. 

There is a way from oat 

The curse of broken law ; — 

A curse for us hath Christ been made;- 
Prophets the promise saw. 

— 24 — 



Oh! then, my soul, rejoice; 

Thou hast a Priest above : 
"His hands are made of tenderness; 

His heart is made of love." 

He is the sacrifice, 

And He the offerer, too. 
Such love endures through endless years; 

Such love is ever new. 

To-day it is the same 

As when on Calvary's brow 
A weary sufferer bore the cross — 

O, man ! receive it now. 



GOD is a rock. Not a rock like a rock of our earth — 
hardened from boiling liquid, and in God's good 
time to return again by fire to boiling mass and then 
to volatile gas: but a 'rock of ages'' — 

Before the ages of earth began, 
And after the coming of creature man ; 
And after the ages of earth shall cease, 
And strife of nations shall end in peace. 



— 25 



Writen for a hymn to accompany a sermon from Prov. 22:6. 



H 



ow blest the child whose early steps 

Are guided in Thy truth, 
Whose feet pursue the path divine, 

E'en in the days of youth. 

IVIanhood with all its care and strife 

Shall press his soul in vain; 
He knows the path of endless life, 

Nor chooses death again. 

Old age shall blossom on his head; — 

He still Thy truth pursues: 
The world with all that it can boast, 

Hides not the Heav'n he views. 

Oh I blessed, then, the early train'd 
In paths of God's own truth ; 

They walk in Heav'n's own light and peace. 
Up to old age, from youth. 



:2G — 



FOR HE C/^RETH FOR YOU." 



IFE is like a summer sea; 
Sailing, floating, loving, we; 
Skies of brightness o'er us bend; 
All around us seems a friend. 

Life is like a wintry tide, 
Rocks and wintry shores descried; 
Beating waves with freezing crest, 
Heart of mariner distressed. 

But above botli smile]^and frown, 
There's a voice that's not our own- 
Voice that with a right good will, 
Said on Galilee, ^' Be still." 

Trust we, then, the voice above, 
Voice of mercy, voice of love ; 
Cast we all our burning care 
At the feet of Jesus there. 



27 — 



PRAYER MEETIJ^G. 



ET US improve our opportunities, 

Fast flitting away ; 

Ending some morrow, 

It may be to-day ; 

Bearing themselves 

Down the swift flowing stream ; 
Ending so suddenly, 

Like to a dream. 

Mercy is calling us; 

Love still says come : 
Christ is yet waiting 

To give us a home. 

Blessings of earth 

Still speak of the love 
Pouring upon us 

From the Father above. 

Still unbelief, 

With snare and with wile, 
^ Lurketh about us 

To trap and beguile. 



28' 



While it's about us 

To lure and destroy, 

While sins within us 

O'er-power and annoy, 

Meet we together, 

And oft in one place 

Speak to each other 

The word of God's grace. 



THIS lone "monk," (Luther) as his emperor called 
liim, was to inllict a humbling blow upon the 
papacy. 

Not cohorts armed in glittering steel, 

Not bugle throated host, 
Not council grand from every laud, 

Nothing for man's brave boast. 

Alone, with God above ; 

Alone, with God around : 
Mid fiercest bands and iron hands, 

A trusting soul was found. 



— 29 



DE/ITH. 



i i pyLOAVERS have their time to fade :'* 
» '• Leaves have their time to fall ;" 

The spring nurses the tender blade ; 
Eipens the fruits, the tall. 

But all times are thine own, 

O, thou stern reaper, Death ; 

Bright youth, old age, and manhood's prime, 
The infant's gentle breath. 

Thou lay'st thy hand upon 

The beating heart of youth ; 

Thou leavest beauty on the brow, 
But life is gone, in truth. 

The cold, the marble clay 

Is but ih^ form we loved : 
The soul has fled us quite away, 

Xor lips for us will move. 

All times are thine, O Death ; 

I may not call my own 
A single moment that I live : 

It may be thine alone. 



30 



BUILDING WELL. 



G 



OD stops US ill the race of time 
And shows some things are true. 
The things we pass so lightly by 
Abide forever and for aye; 

While what engrosses all our thought, 
The things we sell, the what we bought, 
Pass quick away, tliough new. 

Oh ! let us ever learn to prize 
The soul that deep within us lies ; 
And fashion all our use of time 
By that, th' immortal and sublime. 

While faithful to the lesser trust, 
Let us remember we are dust, 
A breath that passeth swift away, 
A shadow born but not to stay. 

Thus may we build on things above 
A life of use because of love, 
A soulful life w^herein the rest 
Are made subservient to the best. 

May Jesus be our corner-stone, 
We build our lives on Him alone ; 
And every stone through Him be true, 
He building and the Builder, too. 



31 



MY CHOICE. 



WOULD rather sit iu the dust below 

With God's sunlight of grace around 
Than far above on a lofty throne 
Where God were never found. 

I would rather weep in Eamah 

If God be there beside, 
Than feast with mirth in Beulah 

Without my Heavenly Guidt;. 

I love the mountain sunlight, 

The bracing of its air; 
But better with God in the valley 

Thau alone on the hill-top there. 

I am not blind to beauty, 

IsTor deaf to words of praise; 

But, if these beckon me from duty, 
I can wait till the end of days. 

For my King will come in splendor, 

In a glory all unknown ; 
And for every faithful warrior, 

His praise and His lofty throne. 

Earth's triumphs are short and fitful : 
Earth's i^raises feeble and faint : 

But oh ! for the triumph of Heaven, 

And the Master's praise to His saint ! 



32 



<T>HE day of light and gladness 
» Comes beaming o'er the hills : 

It quickens earth's dark madness ; 
It melts the frozen rills. 

The Sun so long expected, 
The Light of every land, 

Shines o'er the towering mountains; 
And falls on every strand. 

Throw open wide the shutters 
That hide men from its light ; 

Eemovethe human dungeons 
That keep men still in night. 

Proclaim in every valley. 

The earth's bright Sun is risen ; 
And call to all the fettered, 

Come forth from out your prison. 

Be slow to cast a shadow 
To hide the risen Lord ; 

For lo ! He comes with angels, 
Bringing to each reward. 



— 33 — 



Happy, if in that moment, 

He say to thee, " Well donej" 

And with th' attending angels, 
Declare thy race well run. 

But, oh ! unspoken sadness 
If in that hour of fate, 

Thy life a faithless fabric, 

He say to thee, '* Too late." 



w 



HITHER, ah ! whither shall I go 
When, quitting this fond world below, 
I stretch my wings and fly away ? 

Whither, oh ! whither shall I rest 
When, rudely pushed from the home nest, 
I try my wings, so long untried ? 



34 



REDEMPTION. 



COME tempest -wrecked and lost ; 
Behold the matchless cost 
To which thy God hath been 
To save thee from despair. 

Thy soul so much His care, 
Thy soul so great in worth, 
The realms of Heavenly bliss 
Were robbed to purchase this. 

From the blissful realms of day, 
See thy Saviour wend His way ; 
From the throne and glory bright, 
From the realms of perfect light, 
To the earth shrouded in gloom, 
To the cross and to the tomb. 

Lift, O Earth, thy highest praise; 
Anthems, loud, with angels raise: 
Pceans sing with one accord ; — 
Christ is Saviour, Christ is Lord. 



— 35 — 



BethFins manger, lowly place, 
Speaks thy Saviour's matchless grace 
And the sea of Galilee 
Tells of all His love to thee. 

Yet of all, divinest spot, 
Fills the law in every jot, 
Calvary with darkened sky, 
And His wailing, bitter cry. 

Here in anguish, sinner, come; 
Here behold thy awful doom: 
Here behold the Son of God 
Laid beneath the awful rod. 

O my sins! accursed things! — 
Fly from me on swiftest wings. 
Christ hath borne my sins; shall I 
Add the sins that made him die? 

Yet my hope is in His cross; — 
All my righteousness is dross; 
All my hopes must faint and die 
Till beneath His cross I lie. 



36 



O divinest, dearest hope, 
Thou alone with fears must cope; 
Thou alone canst bring the day 
To my heart, sin chased away. 

Light of all the earth arise; 
Bring the day to darkened eyes: 
In the dungeons of the blind, 
In the depths of clouded mind. 

Then shall glory shine afar ; 
Light, earth's darkness cannot mar : 
All pours forth from on^e bright Star, 
Seen in Bethlehem, seen afar. 

Day of hope — its coming dawns — 
Prophets sang it ere the morn ; 
Yet the day earth waits to see, 
Star of hope, O Christ, is Thee. 



37 — 



PROVIDENCE. 



HE skill of men and friends all nigh ; 
Pillowed on the most downy bed, 
With love and luxury o'erspread — 
One vital spark, all cannot bring; 
We live or die, for God is King. 



B 



E faithful in thy lot: 
Thou k no west surely not 
Whether, amid the pain, 
Waiting for joy again, 
Thy God doth thee prepare 
For some more re^ral care. 



^o^ 



To-day stand in thy place; 
Fill it with suited grace: 
To morrow thou caust leave 
To that Hand that doth weave 
For each a destiny 
He giveth not to see. 

— 38 — 



T 



HEN let US live in the faith of Jesus, in full assurance 
of hope, looking toward the time of our death with 
joy and not with grief; filling up our lives bj God's 
grace with faithful serving of Christ, the Lord ; 
looking forward to the great reward to be received 
from Christ, our Captain, our sacrifice aad our 
Priest, our King and our God. 

Heaven's high arches then shall ring 
When the sheaves we homeward bring ; 
When i30or sinners turn and say, 
^'Christ has saved my soul to-day.'' 

Oh ! if joy in Heaven is found 
More o'er one saved soul than ground 
Full with rich and plenteous yield 
Of the blessings of the field. 

Shall we not amid our toil 

In the mill and in the soil, 

Ever labor to the end 

Some poor soul should find its Friend? 

Glad, if Christ our spirits fill, 
Shall we press to do His will. 
Oh ! sweet will of God to save ! 
Likeness to it may we have. 



39 — 







John 19:25-27. 

Calvary, thou dearest spot! 

Yet who would ever thought 
To find beside its glory there, 
This sweet " forget-me-not.'' 

A mother's love enshrined within 
The heart that loveth all : 

A son's kind care for mother's weal, 
Before the dark death pall. 

O Son of God ! true Son of man ! 

We come of thee to learn 
The full glory of righteousness, 

For which some hearts still yearn. 

The cross teaches us sacrifice; — 

It teaches love of God : 
It points the way of life and hope. 

For those beneath the rod. 

"Woman, behold thy son," He said — 
The angels wondering view — 

The glad new day is ushered in : 
God will make all things new. 



40 — 



New, yes ; a new, new righteousness ; 

A fuller love to men ; 
A righteousness so pure and good, 

Beyond the world's short ken. 

Glad, earth takes up the loving cry 
Where e'er the cross is found ; 

Truth springs from out the earth again 
And goodness, from the ground. 

True love of God, pure love to man, 
In Calvary have their rise ; 

And so old earth is new again. 
Waiting for Paradise. 



PRyilSE. 



EACH morning with its mellow light, 
Each closing day enwrapped in night. 
Each noon-tide meal though simple, quite. 
May find praise add to its delight. 



41 



H 



Psalm CVII. 

IS goodness great iiuto the cloud tliat hangs above 

our head, 
Is surer than the daily bread with which we're fed. 
His wonderful surpassing works of grace that o'er 

us pour, 
Are our sure pledge of blessings yet untried, by 

which we ask for more. 

Oh ! trust His goodness yet my soul, indeed ; 
Since in the past, in many a sorest need, 
Thou^ hast His goodness tried, and found it sure ; 
While thou hadst naught but praise to render Him, 
thou wast so poor. 

Wilt thou not then confess before thy fellow men 

There is a goodness high above our ken 

That deigns in wondrous works His creatures' 

wants to supply, 
And in their time of need is nigh? 

Hunger and thirst and homeless wandering sore, 
Dark shadows of the dungeon opening never more, 
Sickness with death-shade on the brow, 
Highest and roughest seas before our prow — 

All these are nothing to that love, 
O man of sin! that seeks thee from above. 
Life's wrecks are oft the trysting place 
Where God meets man with wondrous grace. 

— 42 — 



B 



EFORE the day of vengeance falls, 
Shelter thee 'neath the eternal walls 
Of Zion's cit}^, large and fair; — 
Zion's Deliverer welcomes there. 

All day His hands are stretched ; 

And ''Come " is the sweet word that bids thee home 

Unto thy Father's house of love, 

Built here on earth and built above; — 

For God's own watchful, loving care 

Is with his children everywhere. 



Acts 2:4. 



B 



o seek of God that baptism, divine; 
Let it fill all thy soul. 
Then shall thy peace and joy 

Be without end. 
When God's best blessing, 
His own self, 

Thy paths attend. , 

Go seek that blessing — 'tis the better part; 
Come, ask thy Father for it as thou art : 
He'll not despise thy humble, contrite prayer; 
Thy God Himself will make thy cause His care. 

— 43 — 



THAJ^KSGIYING DAY, 1885. 



L 



ET the vales of healthful breath, 
Full of life and not of death ; 
Let the plains where breezes play, 
Sweet and pure, the livelong day. 
Join with us in songs of praise; 
Join in gladsome, thankful lays. 

On the air glad life is borne, 

Be it zephyr, be it storm ; 

Hide we not from baleful breath. 

Luring us to speedy death. 

O ye breezes, wake the song ; 

Help us praise the whole day long. 



— 44 



M 



o lowing herds are in the stall complaining: 
No flocks bleat sadly on the hillsides, wanting food : 
All join the voice that says, The Lord is good. 

From lonely cabin in the forest dreary, 
And sod house on the prairie far away, 
Voices of praise and gladness rise to-day. 

The dwellers in the city, toiling weary, 

And watching round the works of many lands ; 

Blest in the general benediction, sing psalms. 

And they that toil in many a weary fact'ry, 
Sharing the good that comes from teeming earth, 
To-day, to songs of heart devotion, give birth. 

None pine, who fear God, from great sea to ocean, 
Because the flocks and herds and crops are not ; 
But everywhere is plenty, mansion and cot. 

Only the poor to-day for food are crying — 
Always we have these on our right and left. 
Who would not help them in their sighing, of 
love 's bereft. , 

So, nation, favored by the bounteous Giver, 
Forget not to pour forth thy meed of praise 
To Him who crownest with a goodly portion, 
thy days. 



— 45 



Jesus Our ar(cl Earth's Only Hope. 



T 



HE day has dawued. 'Tis Jesus, 
The day-star of the dawn ; 

He is the star of morning, 

And He, the perfect morn. 

He is the sun of splendor 

That makes the noontide ray ; 

And He, the orb of glory 

That gilds the closing day. 

All earth is dark without Him : 
Within, without, around, 

In earth, and air, and Heaven, 
No light elsewhere is found. 

The heart in its repining 

Mourns for the hoped-for day ; 
Yet there is naught to light us 

Within our cumbrous clay. 



— 46 — 



But if, upon our sorrow, 
His shadow but arise, 

The soul, in hope and gladness, 
Wakes to a new surprise. 

Henceforth, earth is His service 
Who sets the prisoner free; 

And life, a joyful anthem 

Of praise, O Christ, to thee. 



n wflKmnc. 



M 



OT every road runs skyward; 

Some run to foul despair: 
]S"ot every one 's a victor; 

Some are the conquered there. 



— 47 — 



THE ATONEMEriT. 



M 



o bloody rite of mitred priest, 
No life of spotless, harmless beast, 
Washes for us our sin away. 

No less for us can aught suffice; 
Our sin demands no less a price: 
But once for us a Saviour died. 

Him, spotless beast but typified ; 
And He Himself our Priest appears, 
And quells for us our guilty fears. 



3/,77-lS2 
Lot 69 

— 48- 






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